CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida — SpaceX is taking another crack at delivering supplies to the International Space Station and landing the rocket on an ocean barge.

The company's unmanned Falcon rocket is set to blast off before dawn Saturday from Cape Canaveral, Florida.

On Tuesday, steering-system trouble halted the countdown at the last minute. A suspect motor was replaced.

The rocket holds more than 5,000 pounds (2,267 kilograms) of space station supplies. NASA needs the shipment more than ever because of a launch explosion last fall that destroyed another company's supply ship.

Good weather is forecast for the 4:47 a.m. (947 GMT) launch.

Once Dragon is headed to the station, SpaceX will attempt to fly the first-stage booster to a platform in the Atlantic for a vertical landing. Such a feat is unprecedented.

A man who flew a plane into his own house after he had been arrested for assaulting his wife had full access to his employer's plane because he had earned the firm's trust, the president of the Utah company said Tuesday.